University Challenge results, 1975-76

These are the results of the thirteenth series of University Challenge which ran weekly on ITV, starting in the week of 7 November 1975 and probably ending in December 1976. In Anglia the series was shown on Fridays at 17:20, with a running time of 30 minutes.

Once again the first round had a 'winner-stays-on' format, with a team qualifying for the quarter-finals if they won three in a row, and the quarter-finals and semi-finals were single-game knockouts, with the final 'best-of-three'.

The only record of the finals in the TV listings are a repeat of the semi-finals and finals in August 1977, in the middle of the 1976-7 series and over a year after the rest of the shows in the 1975-6 series had apparently finished. There may thus be some mix-up in my lists of games between this series and the following one, in particular if there were not four quarter-finals.

The Christmas special in 1975 saw the 1974-5 winners, Keble College, Oxford, play a team of Dons from their college.

For the whole of the Bamber era TV schedules differed between the different ITV regions, and the show was often broadcast at different times and on different days in different parts of the country, and sometimes the regions were even a week or two out of sync with each other. Where the date differed, I try to use the date the show was broadcast in the Anglia region in the tables.

There are many gaps that I've been unable to find, so please do contact me if you can assist.

The Manchester team, that included the journalist David Aaronovitch, became notorious during their heavy defeat to Downing, Cambridge for answering many of their questions with the name of a Socialist leader, ostensibly as a protest against the Oxbridge bias of the show, although they never explained the reasons behind their behaviour. Filmed in November 1975, despite the show's being stopped several times by the producers to try to reason unsuccessfully with Manchester, the show was still broadcast in early 1976. Aaronovitch described the reaction of the city's residents as "Here's this bloody great University, stuck in the middle, has eaten up all these streets bit by bit, and you would have thought the least they could do is give us some reason to feel proud of them. And now look at this." Manchester were then banned from the show until in Autumn 1979 a student managed to convince the producers that they could apply again. This time the team was selected carefully and managed to reach the semi-finals before losing to the Queens', Cambridge team that included Stephen Fry.